My update.. I have a 1910 Ross rebarrelled to 7 mm Rem Mag.. It has been a project of several years, I bought a centurian barrel for it, and a stock blank from somebody in California, it is english walnut. I made a cross bolt for the stock and guard screws on my lathe, and all that is left to do is put sling swivels on it. It has an 11 inch twist, which I know is a bit slow for 175 grain bullets, but I gave it a try with moly coated 175 gr Speer Grand Slams this morning. It has a Bausch and Lomb 1.5x6 scope. I loaded them to the cannalure with 63.9 grains of CF 7900, which gave a muzzle velocity of 2700 fps with the 23 inch barrel by my chrony. Across a sandbag with my jacket on it, I shot two inches at 100 yards. It had very modest recoil, and showed no signs of pressure or difficult extraction, and although I know this is a mild load for a 7 mag, I will not look to go hotter. as it is flat enough for the 200 yards I hunt within, and will topple anything I point at.. I may play with OAL to decrease group size a bit, but I want excellent brass life. The Ross has an excellent factory trigger, and it is a nice rifle to shoot. I made a butt pad out of a 1-1/4" thick peice of rubber, which I cross drilled enough to soften to my liking. I paid $90 for the ross years ago, $90 for the barrel, $150 to get it installed and chambered. $200 for the inletted stock blank, easily 40 hours over the years inletting , finishing and making parts. So minus my time I have about the cost of a rifle in it, which is as good as I could expect. I am just about to call this project done.